DJ Paul van Dyk makes a comeback
Trance pioneer returns with new album, ‘From Then On’, his first after a near fatal fall
Trance music pioneer Paul van Dyk had hoisted himself onto an elevated ridge of the stage to greet the cheering crowd. He waved and took a stroll — and plunged into an abyss.
A 4.5-metre cavity in the stage had been covered as if it were a solid surface. The German DJ’s girlfriend was told that van Dyk may never speak or walk again.
Just a year and a half after the February 2016 accident at a festival in The Netherlands, van Dyk has not only recovered but has recorded a new album, From Then On, which released on Friday.
The 45-year-old, one of the creators of the fast, free-flowing electronic style that has become trance, has brought to the album a new appreciation for life — and determination to be his own master.
“I was in a coma and when I woke up I wasn’t able to do anything. So whatever I do now is to me a miracle, a gift,” van Dyk said in New York, where he recently premiered a visual-rich live show.
After cheating death, van Dyk will also no longer suffer the recommendations of managers. He said that every sound on
From Then On is “1,000 per cent how I want it to be”.
“I don’t want to waste my talent on somebody else’s idea of how my music should be,” he said.
“I am closer to myself and to my music than I have ever been, simply because there is a certain element of myself that sees life very differently.”
As he sat in a hotel suite with a postcard-like view of the Manhattan skyline, little appeared different about van Dyk, who conversed in English with no trace of trauma.
But van Dyk said the scars were present, if invisible. His legs still go numb and he gets tired after two hours in the studio; once he could spin for eight hours straight.
BROKEN SPINE
“When I’m on stage with the adrenaline and the energy of music... people don’t see this, but as soon as I’m off stage, plfff!” he said, making a noise as if collapsing on a couch.
Van Dyk, who broke his spine in two places and bled inside his brain, was in a coma for two days and later had to relearn the motions of speaking.
But van Dyk did not lose long-term memories, nor did he need to relearn how to make music.
The album stays true to van Dyk’s style of smooth synthesiser melodies that crescendo into climaxes. But the music of From Then On carries a new scale of drama and urgency. starts with more than three minutes of melancholic piano before the rhythms kick in.
CELEBRATION SONG
The tellingly titled IAm
Alive opens with piercing, solitary beats before escalating into a refrain of self-affirming joy.
The album’s first single — Stronger Together, written with Namibian DJ Pierre Pienaar — similarly layers on keyboards to project a transition from loneliness to community.
An accompanying video shows young people striving to find one another in an ultra-hitech city of the future. Van Dyk said Stronger
Together reflected how support from others helped him survive. Told that Stronger
Together was also the slogan of Hillary Clinton’s ill-fated presidential campaign, van Dyk was visibly surprised.
But van Dyk said there was a political subtext.
“I still seriously believe that in the big challenges of this planet we can only pull through together as humans,” he said.
Van Dyk voiced outrage that the far-right Alternative for Germany — “a party that is not distancing itself from Nazis, from racism” — won parliament seats in the recent election.
He vowed to be more politically outspoken. “It’s really about taking a stand and making sure that the achievements of the last 40 to 50 years in the free world aren’t reversed.”
“I was in a coma and when I woke up I wasn’t able to do anything. So whatever I do now is to me a miracle.” PAUL VAN DYK |DJ